Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

< Back to Article

Table 1.

Number of participants who changed and did not change their private moral character judgments under group pressure in studies 1 & 2.

More »

Table 1 Expand

Fig 1.

Mean conformity ratio as a function of moral domains and social norms.

The thick black horizontal line represents the mean with one standard error.

More »

Fig 1 Expand

Fig 2.

The example of virtual peer pressure setting in Study 2.

More »

Fig 2 Expand

Fig 3.

The example of stimuli presentation in the virtual setting in Study 2.

More »

Fig 3 Expand

Fig 4.

The example of the controller and assigned triggers which participants used in the virtual setting in Study 2.

More »

Fig 4 Expand

Fig 5.

Mean conformity ratio as a function of moral domains and social norms.

The thick black horizontal line represents the mean with one standard error.

More »

Fig 5 Expand

Fig 6.

Mean conformity ratio as a function of the source of social pressure, political orientation, moral domains, and social norms.

The error bars represent one standard error.

More »

Fig 6 Expand